We make many redundant calls to isInterestingAlloca in the AddressSanitzier
pass. This is especially inefficient for allocas that have many uses. Let's
cache the results to speed up compilation.
The compile time improvements depend on the input. I did not see much
difference on benchmarks; however, I have a test case where compile time
goes from minutes to under a second.
llvm-svn: 233397
The experiments can be used to evaluate potential optimizations that remove
instrumentation (assess false negatives). Instead of completely removing
some instrumentation, you set Exp to a non-zero value (mask of optimization
experiments that want to remove instrumentation of this instruction).
If Exp is non-zero, this pass will emit special calls into runtime
(e.g. __asan_report_exp_load1 instead of __asan_report_load1). These calls
make runtime terminate the program in a special way (with a different
exit status). Then you run the new compiler on a buggy corpus, collect
the special terminations (ideally, you don't see them at all -- no false
negatives) and make the decision on the optimization.
The exact reaction to experiments in runtime is not implemented in this patch.
It will be defined and implemented in a subsequent patch.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8198
llvm-svn: 232502
By default we want our gcov emission to stay 4.2 compatible, which
means we need to continue emit the exit block last by default. We add
an option to emit it before the body for users that need it.
llvm-svn: 232438
Summary:
Now that the DataLayout is a mandatory part of the module, let's start
cleaning the codebase. This patch is a first attempt at doing that.
This patch is not exactly NFC as for instance some places were passing
a nullptr instead of the DataLayout, possibly just because there was a
default value on the DataLayout argument to many functions in the API.
Even though it is not purely NFC, there is no change in the
validation.
I turned as many pointer to DataLayout to references, this helped
figuring out all the places where a nullptr could come up.
I had initially a local version of this patch broken into over 30
independant, commits but some later commit were cleaning the API and
touching part of the code modified in the previous commits, so it
seemed cleaner without the intermediate state.
Test Plan:
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231740
Summary:
DataLayout keeps the string used for its creation.
As a side effect it is no longer needed in the Module.
This is "almost" NFC, the string is no longer
canonicalized, you can't rely on two "equals" DataLayout
having the same string returned by getStringRepresentation().
Get rid of DataLayoutPass: the DataLayout is in the Module
The DataLayout is "per-module", let's enforce this by not
duplicating it more than necessary.
One more step toward non-optionality of the DataLayout in the
module.
Make DataLayout Non-Optional in the Module
Module->getDataLayout() will never returns nullptr anymore.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: resistor, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7992
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231270
Do not instrument direct accesses to stack variables that can be
proven to be inbounds, e.g. accesses to fields of structs on stack.
But it eliminates 33% of instrumentation on webrtc/modules_unittests
(number of memory accesses goes down from 290152 to 193998) and
reduces binary size by 15% (from 74M to 64M) and improved compilation time by 6-12%.
The optimization is guarded by asan-opt-stack flag that is off by default.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7583
llvm-svn: 231241
Introduce -mllvm -sanitizer-coverage-8bit-counters=1
which adds imprecise thread-unfriendly 8-bit coverage counters.
The run-time library maps these 8-bit counters to 8-bit bitsets in the same way
AFL (http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/technical_details.txt) does:
counter values are divided into 8 ranges and based on the counter
value one of the bits in the bitset is set.
The AFL ranges are used here: 1, 2, 3, 4-7, 8-15, 16-31, 32-127, 128+.
These counters provide a search heuristic for single-threaded
coverage-guided fuzzers, we do not expect them to be useful for other purposes.
Depending on the value of -fsanitize-coverage=[123] flag,
these counters will be added to the function entry blocks (=1),
every basic block (=2), or every edge (=3).
Use these counters as an optional search heuristic in the Fuzzer library.
Add a test where this heuristic is critical.
llvm-svn: 231166
Currently, the ASan executables built with -O0 are unnecessarily slow.
The main reason is that ASan instrumentation pass inserts redundant
checks around promotable allocas. These allocas do not get instrumented
under -O1 because they get converted to virtual registered by mem2reg.
With this patch, ASan instrumentation pass will only instrument non
promotable allocas, giving us a speedup of 39% on a collection of
benchmarks with -O0. (There is no measurable speedup at -O1.)
llvm-svn: 230724
This symbol exists only to pull in the required pieces of the runtime,
so nothing ever needs to refer to it. Making it hidden avoids the
potential for issues with duplicate symbols when linking profiled
libraries together.
llvm-svn: 230566
When AddressSanitizer only a single dynamic alloca and no static allocas, due to an early exit from FunctionStackPoisoner::poisonStack we forget to unpoison the dynamic alloca. This patch fixes that.
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D7810
llvm-svn: 230316
Canonicalize access to function attributes to use the simpler API.
getAttributes().getAttribute(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex, Kind)
=> getFnAttribute(Kind)
getAttributes().hasAttribute(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex, Kind)
=> hasFnAttribute(Kind)
llvm-svn: 229202
I've built some tests in WebRTC with and without this change. With this change number of __tsan_read/write calls is reduced by 20-40%, binary size decreases by 5-10% and execution time drops by ~5%. For example:
$ ls -l old/modules_unittests new/modules_unittests
-rwxr-x--- 1 dvyukov 41708976 Jan 20 18:35 old/modules_unittests
-rwxr-x--- 1 dvyukov 38294008 Jan 20 18:29 new/modules_unittests
$ objdump -d old/modules_unittests | egrep "callq.*__tsan_(read|write|unaligned)" | wc -l
239871
$ objdump -d new/modules_unittests | egrep "callq.*__tsan_(read|write|unaligned)" | wc -l
148365
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7069
llvm-svn: 228917
This allows IDEs to recognize the entire set of header files for
each of the core LLVM projects.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7526
Reviewed By: Chris Bieneman
llvm-svn: 228798
Add handling for __llvm_coverage_mapping to the InstrProfiling
pass. We need to make sure the constant and any profile names it
refers to are in the correct sections, which is easier and cleaner to
do here where we have to know about profiling sections anyway.
This is really tricky to test without a frontend, so I'm committing
the test for the fix in clang. If anyone knows a good way to test this
within LLVM, please let me know.
Fixes PR22531.
llvm-svn: 228793
An atomic store always make the target location fully initialized (in the
current implementation). It should not store origin. Initialized memory can't
have meaningful origin, and, due to origin granularity (4 bytes) there is a
chance that this extra store would overwrite meaningfull origin for an adjacent
location.
llvm-svn: 228444
By default, store all local variables in dynamic alloca instead of
static one. It reduces the stack space usage in use-after-return mode
(dynamic alloca will not be called if the local variables are stored
in a fake stack), and improves the debug info quality for local
variables (they will not be described relatively to %rbp/%rsp, which
are assumed to be clobbered by function calls).
llvm-svn: 228336
Summary:
This change allows users to create SpecialCaseList objects from
multiple local files. This is needed to implement a proper support
for -fsanitize-blacklist flag (allow users to specify multiple blacklists,
in addition to default blacklist, see PR22431).
DFSan can also benefit from this change, as DFSan instrumentation pass now
accepts ABI-lists both from -fsanitize-blacklist= and -mllvm -dfsan-abilist flags.
Go bindings are fixed accordingly.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, axw, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7367
llvm-svn: 228155
For the time being, it is still hardcoded to support only the 39 VA bits
variant, I plan to work on supporting 42 and 48 VA bits variants, but I
don't have access to such hardware at the moment.
Patch by Chrystophe Lyon.
llvm-svn: 227965
If a memory access is unaligned, emit __tsan_unaligned_read/write
callbacks instead of __tsan_read/write.
Required to change semantics of __tsan_unaligned_read/write to not do the user memory.
But since they were unused (other than through __sanitizer_unaligned_load/store) this is fine.
Fixes long standing issue 17:
https://code.google.com/p/thread-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=17
llvm-svn: 227231
Previously we always stored 4 bytes of origin at the destination address
even for 8-byte (and longer) stores.
This should fix rare missing, or incorrect, origin stacks in MSan reports.
llvm-svn: 226658
The new code does not create new basic blocks in the case when shadow is a
compile-time constant; it generates either an unconditional __msan_warning
call or nothing instead.
llvm-svn: 226569
and updated.
This may appear to remove handling for things like alias analysis when
splitting critical edges here, but in fact no callers of SplitEdge
relied on this. Similarly, all of them wanted to preserve LCSSA if there
was any update of the loop info. That makes the interface much simpler.
With this, all of BasicBlockUtils.h is free of Pass arguments and
prepared for the new pass manager. This is tho majority of utilities
that relied on pass arguments.
llvm-svn: 226459
APIs and replace it and numerous booleans with an option struct.
The critical edge splitting API has a really large surface of flags and
so it seems worth burning a small option struct / builder. This struct
can be constructed with the various preserved analyses and then flags
can be flipped in a builder style.
The various users are now responsible for directly passing along their
analysis information. This should be enough for the critical edge
splitting to work cleanly with the new pass manager as well.
This API is still pretty crufty and could be cleaned up a lot, but I've
focused on this change just threading an option struct rather than
a pass through the API.
llvm-svn: 226456
The pass is really just a means of accessing a cached instance of the
TargetLibraryInfo object, and this way we can re-use that object for the
new pass manager as its result.
Lots of delta, but nothing interesting happening here. This is the
common pattern that is developing to allow analyses to live in both the
old and new pass manager -- a wrapper pass in the old pass manager
emulates the separation intrinsic to the new pass manager between the
result and pass for analyses.
llvm-svn: 226157
While the term "Target" is in the name, it doesn't really have to do
with the LLVM Target library -- this isn't an abstraction which LLVM
targets generally need to implement or extend. It has much more to do
with modeling the various runtime libraries on different OSes and with
different runtime environments. The "target" in this sense is the more
general sense of a target of cross compilation.
This is in preparation for porting this analysis to the new pass
manager.
No functionality changed, and updates inbound for Clang and Polly.
llvm-svn: 226078